Westbrook, MollyStudying the ontogeny of animal behavior is fundamental to ethology and allows understanding how behaviors in early life may affect later life success. The social cichlid Astatotilapia burtoni is an excellent model for examining the mechanisms of early life aggression due to the robust social hierarchy enforced by stereotyped, measurable social behaviors. We examine how hormonal signaling affects early life aggression through pharmacology and CRISPR-Cas9 mutants. We test which sensory pathways convey aggression-eliciting stimuli through sensory deprivation experiments. And we identify kinematic features that predict aggression through machine-learning video tracking algorithms. We observe that aggressive behaviors emerge around 17 days post fertilization (dpf), correlating with when the animals transition to free swimming away from the mother. We find that sex steroids subtly organize behavioral circuits for aggression and suggest that unknown additional mechanisms play a leading role. We show that thyroid hormone is not necessary or sufficient for the transition to aggressive behavior. We show that visual signals are necessary for the full expression of aggression, but in the absence of visual signal, low levels of aggression remain. We show that ciliated olfactory receptor signaling maintains low levels of aggression, as mutant animals display higher levels of aggressive behavior between 17 and 24 dpf. Finally, we demonstrate that swimming velocity has potential to predict aggressive instances of behavior. Together, we find multiple levels of control for early life aggressive bouts from sensory input to hormonal organization of brain circuits.enSENSORY AND HORMONAL MECHANISMS OF EARLY LIFE BEHAVIOR IN A SOCIAL CICHLID FISHThesisBiologyBehaviorMachine LearningOlfactionSex SteroidsThyroid HormoneVision